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This volume contains twelve stories which, for one reason or
another, have lain uncollected after their initial publication, an
era spanning the years 1986 to 1999. Additionally, four never-sold
stories of roughly the same vintage-pulled from Di Filippo's files,
with the oldest dating from 1984-see print here for the first time.
THE MAN WHOM THINGS HATED FLASHERS BELOW THE WRACK THE GREAT JONES
COOP TEN GIGASOUL PARTY CAMPION'S TREE WINTER IN AMERICA ROYAUME DU
REVE TRIPLETS THE JONES CONTINUUM WATERLOO SUNSET MODERN
CONVENIENCES I KANT CUZ I'M TOO JUNG HEAVEN SENT ME AN ANGEL,
C.O.D. A NIGHT IN THE THIRTEENTH AVENUE MISSION STRANGE BREW FAX"
In his new novel, A Mouthful of Tongues, Paul Di Filippo, cult
author of Ciphers, The Steampunk Trilogy, and Ribofunk, makes his
boldest fictional statement yet. Writing in the tradition of Kathy
Acker and Samuel R. Delany, but with a subversive brio all his own,
Di Filippo here imagines a true erotic revolution, a crusade of the
libido that will topple a corrupt and jaded future world order, and
possibly much besides . . . Kerry Hackett is just another corporate
pawn in the urban cauldron of 2015, besieged on all sides by those
who would possess and exploit her. Driven to desperation, she
undergoes a mysterious transformation into an alchemical goddess,
wanderer of the timelines. In a magnificently evoked parallel
Brazil, a place of seedy splendor and charismatic lusts, Kerry, or
that which she has become, tests her carnal arsenal on targets
deserving and undeserving; but the attention of a more powerful
agency has been attracted, and a yet stranger metamorphosis awaits.
A tale of heartbreak, revenge, and liberation, written in Paul Di
Filippo's most fantastically effervescent prose, A Mouthful of
Tongues is a work of science fiction which crosses boundaries and
breaks taboos with brilliant savage abandon. It can only add to its
author's rapidly growing following, and will shake the world of
speculative fiction to its very foundations. "Out of a rich impasto
of language, a story that is sensual, sexual, and hot takes shape
around one of the most engaging heroines since Southern and
Hoffenberg's Candy." --Samuel R. Delany "Sacred sin, that's Di
Filippo's force here. We have participated in a transpersonal act
that lifts our consciousness above the situational polarities of
morality and into the psyche's unknown, where objective energetic
processes fuse dream and matter--and make us us. A ruthless fantasy
of aggressive sexuality and archaic intentions." --A. A. Attanasio
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Jigsaw Nation (Hardcover)
Edward J. McFadden III, E Sedia; Contributions by Paul Di Filippo
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R799
Discovery Miles 7 990
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Ships in 10 - 15 working days
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The Unitied States is divided, blue states against red states. In
the wake of the 2004 Presidential election the citizens of America
take matters into their own hands, and secession becomes reality.
In this volume of fiction, you will find tales that address the
question: what if the blue states left the republic? What if the
greatest country in the world split-up? What would this mean for
the rest of the world? How would the parts of the former USA fair
in a new world where theyʼre no longer the single superpower? What
would this startling future hold? Read stories by Paul Di Filippo,
Robert Lopresti, Tara Kolden, Douglas Lain, Carole McDonnell, Gene
Stewart, C.J. Henderson, Cody Goodfellow, Edward J. McFadden III,
David Bartell, J. Stern, Patrick Thomas, Ruth Nestvold & Jay
Lake, K.M. Praschak, Michael Jasper, Erin Fitzgerald, Paul G.
Tremblay, Darby Harn, and Seth Lindberg. Join these authors as they
let their frustrations seethe, and discover the new world order
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Deprivers (Paperback)
Steven-Elliot Altman; Foreword by Paul Di Filippo
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R481
R413
Discovery Miles 4 130
Save R68 (14%)
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Ships in 10 - 15 working days
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In his Foreword, Rich Horton says: "First rate stories..."
"Time Considered as a Series of Thermite Burns in No Particular
Order" is a clever and very funny time travel romp; "The
Beancounter's Cat" is set in a far future with Clarkean science
sufficiently advanced to appear magical; "Walls of Flesh, Bars of
Bone" (with Barbara Lamar) is another look at the mystery of human
destiny; "Under the Moons of Venus" is a remarkable, evocative
homage to one of SF's greats." Well-known editor Gardner Dozois has
said of "The Beancounter's Cat" that it ..".starts out reading like
fantasy, and gradually turns into very far-future SF." Also
included is an original tale with Paul Di Filippo, "Luminous Fish,"
taking Mike Moorcock's famous character Jerry Cornelius for a spin
in the 21st century
Nine scintillating science fiction stories by a major writer in
the field.
In the tradition of the Ace Double 2-in-1 books (flip one side over
to read the other book), here's the 19th Wildside Double:
COSMOCOPIA: A SCIENCE FICTION NOVEL, by Paul Di Filippo. Frank
Lazorg's gone mad The dean of the fantasy art illustrators has
reached his end: his creative powers have deserted him. Then a
strange new drug promises to reinvigorate him, both as man and
artist. But the substance soon results in madness, plunging Frank
into a world inhabited by monstrous parodies of humanity. Yet this
new dimension has its own delights, as Frank soon discovers when he
meets the female alien called Crutchsump A science fiction
adventure of mind and body. AFTER THE COLLAPSE: STORIES FROM
GREENHOUSE EARTH, by Paul Di Filippo. From the swarming redoubts of
the polar regions, where humanity huddles from the savage heat of
Greenhouse Earth, to the dusty refugee camps of a shattered
America, here are six riveting tales of life during the hard-luck
times of a post-holocaust planet.
What happens when the tools and themes of science fiction are
applied to the genre of science fiction itself-and to publishing in
general? Surprisingly, the result is not a black hole of dreary
self-referentiality but a supernova of literary comedy, in the
manner of classicists such as S. J. Perelman, Stephen Leacock and
Robert Benchley, and postmodernists such as Mark Leyner, Will Self
and Steve Aylett. In this collection of short, sharp, satirical
gems, Paul Di Filippo-noted for his own fiction and criticism,
which gives him an insider's perspective-turns a keen eye on the
foibles, fallacies, fads and failures of science fiction the
industry, mining comedic gold from the gaffes, pomposities and
pretensions of authors, publicists, reviewers, publishers, editors,
fans, librarians and bookstore owners. Using their own words as
springboards in many cases, he extrapolates wildly, in the classic
manner of the best GALAXY magazine stories, to give us such
improbable but inevitable scenarios as literary hit men,
self-blinded authors, agents as personal servants and a Victorian
internet. Although these japes abound with in-jokes, nothing more
is required to enjoy them than a basic familiarity with science
fiction, an empathy for the human condition, and a willingness to
laugh heartily.
What happens when the tools and themes of science fiction are
applied to the genre of science fiction itself-and to publishing in
general? Surprisingly, the result is not a black hole of dreary
self-referentiality but a supernova of literary comedy, in the
manner of classicists such as S. J. Perelman, Stephen Leacock and
Robert Benchley, and postmodernists such as Mark Leyner, Will Self
and Steve Aylett. In this collection of short, sharp, satirical
gems, Paul Di Filippo-noted for his own fiction and criticism,
which gives him an insider's perspective-turns a keen eye on the
foibles, fallacies, fads and failures of science fiction the
industry, mining comedic gold from the gaffes, pomposities and
pretensions of authors, publicists, reviewers, publishers, editors,
fans, librarians and bookstore owners. Using their own words as
springboards in many cases, he extrapolates wildly, in the classic
manner of the best GALAXY magazine stories, to give us such
improbable but inevitable scenarios as literary hit men,
self-blinded authors, agents as personal servants and a Victorian
internet. Although these japes abound with in-jokes, nothing more
is required to enjoy them than a basic familiarity with science
fiction, an empathy for the human condition, and a willingness to
laugh heartily.
Paul Di Filippo is one of Science Fiction's finest short story
writers, wild, witty, exuberantly imaginative; Babylon Sisters and
Other Posthumans is a generous showcase of his strange,
transformative, and powerful Hard SF visions. The fourteen stories
collected here are glimpses into the most fantastic possibilities
of human evolution-biological, social, and cultural. From a New
York split into warring walled enclaves, to the destiny of our
species as a strain of virus, to an Africa made over by nanotech
messiahs, to a future Earth protected by half-alien angels, to wars
of liberation from what we have always so tragically been: these
are only some of the awe-inspiring transitions to be found in
Babylon Sisters. Read here of rebellion by books against their
librarian, of cosmic destiny remade by stellar lunatics, of
disorienting ventures beyond the boundaries of the human; discover
here the perverse and terrible dangers of the age of posthumanity.
In his new novel, A Mouthful of Tongues, Paul Di Filippo, cult
author of Ciphers, The Steampunk Trilogy, and Ribofunk, makes his
boldest fictional statement yet. Writing in the tradition of Kathy
Acker and Samuel R. Delany, but with a subversive brio all his own,
Di Filippo here imagines a true erotic revolution, a crusade of the
libido that will topple a corrupt and jaded future world order, and
possibly much besides... Kerry Hackett is just another corporate
pawn in the urban cauldron of 2015, besieged on all sides by those
who would possess and exploit her. Driven to desperation, she
undergoes a mysterious transformation into an alchemical goddess,
wanderer of the timelines. In a magnificently evoked parallel
Brazil, a place of seedy splendor and charismatic lusts, Kerry, or
that which she has become, tests her carnal arsenal on targets
deserving and undeserving; but the attention of a more powerful
agency has been attracted, and a yet stranger metamorphosis awaits.
most fantastically effervescent prose, A Mouthful of Tongues is a
work of science fiction which crosses boundaries and breaks taboos
with brilliant savage abandon. It can only add to its author's
rapidly growing following, and will shake the world of speculative
fiction to its very foundations. Out of a rich impasto of language,
a story that is sensual, sexual, and hot takes shape around one of
the most engaging heroines since Southern and Hoffenberg's Candy. -
Samuel R. Delany. Sacred sin, that's Di Filippo's force here. We
have participated in a transpersonal act that lifts our
consciousness above the situational polarities of morality and into
the psyche's unknown, where objective energetic processes fuse
dream and matter - and make us us. A ruthless fantasy of aggressive
sexuality and archaic intentions. - A. A. Attanasio.
This story collection “showcases that lighter side of Paul Di
Filippo . . . with some memorable moments of brilliant
wit and storytelling” (Infinity Plus). With twenty tales, a bold
lack of restraint, and amazing stylistic diversity, Di Filippo
makes strange bedfellows of a range of characters—from Jayne
Mansfield to Pythagoras to Disney “imagineers” to the Virgin
Mary—fit together inside a bountiful collection of surprises,
humor, and the very, very strange. William Gibson has identified
his writing as “spooky, haunting, and hilarious,” and after you
absorb all the shocks, you will inevitably agree.
An outrageous trio of novellas that twist the Victorian era out of
shape, by a master of alternate history: “Spooky, haunting,
hilarious” (William Gibson). Welcome to the world of steampunk, a
nineteenth century outrageously reconfigured through weird science.
With his magnificent trilogy, acclaimed author Paul Di Filippo
demonstrates how this unique subgenre of science fiction is done to
perfection—reinventing a mannered age of corsets and industrial
revolution with odd technologies born of a truly twisted
imagination. In “Victoria,” the inexplicable disappearance of
the British monarch-to-be prompts a scientist to place a
human-lizard hybrid clone on the throne during the search for the
missing royal. But the doppelgänger queen comes with a most
troubling flaw: an insatiable sexual appetite. The somewhat
Lovecraftian “Hottentots” chronicles the very unusual adventure
of Swiss naturalist and confirmed bigot Louis Agassiz as his
determined search for a rather grisly fetish plunges him into a
world of black magic and monsters. Finally, in “Walt and
Emily,” the hitherto secret and quite steamy love affair between
Emily Dickinson and Walt Whitman is revealed in all its sensuous
glory—as are their subsequent interdimensional travels aboard a
singular ship that transcends the boundaries of time and reality.
Ingenious, hilarious, ribald, and utterly remarkable, Di
Filippo’s The Steampunk Trilogy is a one-of-a-kind
literary journey to destinations at once strangely familiar and
profoundly strange.
Paul Di Filippo is one of Science Fiction's finest short story
writers, wild, witty, exuberantly imaginative; Babylon Sisters and
Other Posthumans is a generous showcase of his strange,
transformative, and powerful Hard SF visions. The fourteen stories
collected here are glimpses into the most fantastic possibilities
of human evolution-biological, social, and cultural. From a New
York split into warring walled enclaves, to the destiny of our
species as a strain of virus, to an Africa made over by nanotech
messiahs, to a future Earth protected by half-alien angels, to wars
of liberation from what we have always so tragically been: these
are only some of the awe-inspiring transitions to be found in
Babylon Sisters. Read here of rebellion by books against their
librarian, of cosmic destiny remade by stellar lunatics, of
disorienting ventures beyond the boundaries of the human; discover
here the perverse and terrible dangers of the age of posthumanity.
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